$113.5 billion worth of electronics sold in 2004 93
ravy writes "Americans bought $113.5 billion worth of electronics in 2004 and by 2005 the number will reach $127.5 billion. Digital television sets, MP3 players and flash memory cards were the best-sellers percentagewise, while PCs and cell phones enjoyed more steady growth in terms of sales. Google Zeitgeist also lists ipod, digital camera and mp3 as the most popular consumer electronics queries for the year past."
Longevity? (Score:5, Insightful)
The calculator on my desk was purchased in 1972. The PC I'm writing this on was bought in 1999. Both are expected to last me for many more years to come. My fear is that the $113.5b figure in the article is mostly the result of people burning money for no reason.
Re:Longevity? (Score:3, Interesting)
My calculators are at least 10 years.
However, I seem to be sending more and more money to Apple lately... The trend continues.
Re:Longevity? (Score:1)
It's not fast enough anymore. You'll soon have to buy a new one...
Re:Longevity? (Score:2)
Re:Longevity? (Score:1)
Out of curiousity, why wouldn't a laptop computer do (with either the real Mathematica, or something "free" like Maxima)? (Aside from the sheer coolness factor, that is?)
As cool as a "portable mathematica" would be, I can't see the market for such a device being very large (i.e., no one would make any money off it, unless it was very expensive, and then it would not sell well, due to competition from laptops).
(Side note: free, t
PC won't last (Score:2)
Re:PC won't last (Score:2)
Re:PC won't last (Score:2)
CPUs suffer long term issues from solder fatigue, corrosion, diffusion, intermetallic growth, etc. I believe that reliability models for these things are based on ensuring you don't run into issues for 7 years.
Re:Longevity? (Score:1)
Really. How many of these gadgets get looked at a week after purchase.
Re:Longevity? (Score:1)
Biodegradable computers (Score:2)
Allow me to suggest a project to build biodegradable computers. Aside from those two words, I don't have any idea as to how to do it. But if Man can put and man on the moon or create an open-source alternative to Microsoft from the mud up, we can face the challenge of building a biodegradable computer.
The first hurdle is the massive lack of imagination needed to find currently prod
Gross (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Gross (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gross (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Gross (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Gross (Score:2, Insightful)
If you don't like, buy cheaper stuff. PC stuff is pretty damn cheap compared to what it used to be 15 years ago.
Price = status (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Price = status (Score:2)
Having said that, the poster has a good point. This is why many products come in threes.
Re:Gross (Score:2)
Take a course in economics. Production cost is only a very small fraction of the total cost of the chip. You still have the billion dollars in investment it takes to buld the fab plant, the immense R&D costs for the physics behand these things, the costs for sales, marketing, advertising, distribution, administrative costs to run the company and yes dare I say it PROFIT!!! for the stockholders who have sunk their hard-earned 401K money into the compa
Re:Gross (Score:1)
Re:Gross (Score:2)
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission requires that every company that issues stock publish exactly this data in an annual report. These reports and data from them are avaiable from company web sites, government sites and various financial data sites.
It is not an assumption
Jail time for DRAM price fixing (Score:2)
Gunter Hefner, formerly Infineon's vice president of sales for memory products, is now US Inmate #98184-011, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. [bop.gov] Heinrich Florian, former vice president for sales marketing and logistics for memory products, is now US Inmate #98182-011.
Infineon had to pay $160 million in fines.
Samsung, Hynix, and Micron have also been implicated. The investigation continues.
Consumer Electronics (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Consumer Electronics (Score:1)
Elections Sold (Score:5, Funny)
$113.5 billion worth of elections sold in 2004
I thought to myself, "Well, that explains that!"
Re:Elections Sold (Score:1)
Funny, I had read it as:
And was trying to figure out if that was a reasonable price for electricity. I need to get some sleep.
What about the engineers? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:What about the engineers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of November 2003, in the United States, there are
150,000 electrical engineers earning a median of $71k / year [bls.gov] for a total of around $10 billion.
130,000 "electronics engineers, except computer" earning a median of $73k / year [bls.gov] for another $9.5 billion or so.
70,000 computer hardware engineers earning a median of $79k / year [bls.gov] for a total of $5.5 billion.
Yes, that's medians and not averages, but
Re:What about the engineers? (Score:2)
Parent non-sequitor is Insightful? (Score:2)
So, out of all the revenue of the Health Care industry, how much goes to the guy who cleans bed pans? Betcha it's not that much. Makes me wonder why anyone in their right minds would want to go into Health Care these days.
A more interesting question might be if you restate as:
Industry I has revenue R. Select occupation O, in I, such that your individual share of R is maximized.
Now that I've written that, it simplifies again; Which occupation pays the best? Percentage of indu
Good! (Score:1)
It's good to see this type of trend in the tech market. Slow and steady is the way I would like to see it go, because sharp hills are almost always followed by sharp valleys. And I would certainly hate to see what few jobs that are opening up all be gone within two years time......again.
How does that compare to worldwide sales numbers? (Score:3, Insightful)
yes it does matter (Score:1)
Re:yes it does matter (Score:1)
Top yahoo Searches (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hooray for the Chinese!!!!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a country that as little as 6 years ago said war with the US is inevitable. They are spending vasts sums of money to modernize their military, and may very well get the EU to destroy the ban on selling them weapons.
Bush's election is the best thing that ever could have happened to the Chinese. They can talk all they want about trade reform and IP laws, but because they realize that if they stop buying US bonds, the US economy is fucked, and use that to their every advantage. I know Dick Cheney likes to pretend that deficits don't matter, but maybe I'm just old fashioned when I think that letting the largest communist country on earth make us their bitch ISN'T such a bright idea......
Maybe the US should take a step back and think about the costs and benefits of our trade realationship with China.
Re:Hooray for the Chinese!!!!!! (Score:1)
HDTV's #1 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:HDTV's #1 (Score:2)
And I'm not sure what you're talking about, costs for HDTVs are definitely coming down.
Re:HDTV's #1 (Score:2)
Re:HDTV's #1 (Score:2)
How much did they throw into landfills? (Score:2, Interesting)
Other industries (Score:1)
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:2)
I don't want to work in a factory, but I'm sure there are many unemployed people who would. Besides, it's really no worse than working at McDonalds, Walmart, et al for minimum wage. The more things are made in China by slave labour, these are the only jobs that lower class citizens will be able to get. The v
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:2)
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:2)
What was your point again? Oh wait you dont have one.
Arrogant nationlistic prick.
Don't normally reply to AC's, but I can't resist this one... I can proudly say that I don't shop at Walmart. I look at labels and see where things are made before I nonchalantly purchase it because it is cheap. I'd gladly pay a premium for something made in Canada (or the States). Why do people get so up in arms about ch
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:1, Informative)
Here [digitimes.com] is a list of companies of companies that manufacture stuff for Apple. For example new Ipod shuffle is made by Asus. Others are also Taiwanese companies that have a lot of production in China.
Of course, also over the half of motherboards and graphic cards are made in China.
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:3, Insightful)
You guys don't get it.
If one is manufacturing wicker baskets, T-shirts, or tennis shoes, by hand, then the cost of labor is a significant percentage of total cost.
Make that wicker basket by machine, and labor costs go way down. Productivity goes up.
Near-slave labor does not provide the cheap goods that are sold to us. Real and true slave labor would not provide enough cost savings either.
The labor costs are not a signigficant part of a Dell Laptop.
The real cost is paid by the
Re:But where is it all made? (Score:2)
You mean provide cheap labor for low value added jobs, allowing the US workforce to leverage those products focus on higher margin activities.
Proprietary marketing model (Score:1)
So instead of one universal programmable, extensible machine, sometimes refferes as PC he has: XBOX, DVD player that he had before xbox came out, TV set, maybe even an old VCR, calculator and tons of junk such as 300Kpixel camera.
Now I see two trends:
Every new product makes some other obsolete, so in fact they don't sell something revolutionary, something really creatively new, they just
Re:Proprietary marketing model (Score:2)
The advantage of, say MP3s, as far as I'm concerned is the much smaller space that they take up. Imagine a stack of 45s (one song per side for our younger readers) -what were they, 7 inches? And fairly thick in their cardboard sleeves. I'm not going to work out what size stack it would be, but several thousand tracks on a pocket sized device sounds far more space efficient.
Tape isn't the same as vinyl - have you ever tried to record your own vinyl album without a recording
Speaking of purchasing technologies... (Score:5, Interesting)
I am not talking about "Wow, my cell phone can view lynx web pages" but rather portable computing with a dedicated hookup to the net 24 hours a day everywhere you go. And no, pointing to hobbling along with a GPRS enabled palm and a cell phone plan is not what I am asking.
Perhaps we as humans NEED to disconnect from the net completely every so often. I sure as heck dont want to though. I go to the gym, go to work, forced to go shopping with wifey, have to see family etc. I want a pair of glasses hooked up to some unit about the size of a cigarette box that will allow me to get a netfeed, highspeed, anywhere. Or, barring that, cybernetic implants in the ol' eye to display them woulnd't be that bad (barring popups, or attacks by hackers).
Yeah, I am an anime junkie but I want the world promised to us by Lain. Its just - I have gotten so used to having any information available at a whim, that to be disconnected whenever I leave the confines of a computer room is kinda.. sad. And that is kinda sad I know, but its the way I am - I cant be the only one.
How much longer do I have to wait? Anyone? Bueler?
Next Year Should Be Even Larger (Score:5, Informative)
Flat panel monitors are now affordable. Just last week I noticed a 17 inch had fallen into the 200$ mark. This was pretty much the selling point for me and I suspect many others.
The FCC has released a huge list of mandates for DTV conversion. So unless nothing changes we should see more full power DTV stations by July and then the last mile is July 2006. With that there is a slew of tuners to purchase, infrastructure upgrades and some even more expensive equipment to purchase by the broadcasters themselves. (Alone I've had various quotes for around 20k just for DTV guide data insertion).
So the television industry itself should provide a significant over all increase on the consumer and provider level.
I would be interested to know what other industries have seen some fairly signficant change and what cost expenditures are expected.
Re:Next Year Should Be Even Larger (Score:1)
For those people looking for these deals, note that both 1024x768 and 1280x1024 monitors are falling into this price range (although, IIRC, the 1024x768 ones sometimes fall even lower -- into the $150-$200 range). Make sure that you get the one you really want. ;-)
(Also, good 1600x1200 monitors sometimes fall into the $60
I spent my fair share... (Score:2)
Worldwide or US? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd be interested in seeing comparitive numbers with Japan, who are some serious gadget lovers.
Good one, (Score:2)
cheap electronics (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess I'm just old and cranky (Score:1)
Re:I guess I'm just old and cranky (Score:1)
Kibble is junk that seeps it's way into our lives unsuspectingly.
Care of Philip K. Dick.
Re:I guess I'm just old and cranky (Score:1)
Mp3 players to listen to Ludwig Van. HDTV to watch Nova on PBS-HD. Digital Cameras to take pictures of your family. Cell phones to call home and see how your wife is. Ring tones for something fun and quirky.
It just seems like there is no real progress here, only just more junk.....bitch bitch bitch.
This is why the DMCA must die (Score:3, Interesting)
When you look at the DMCA as a tool by which the "media sector" is trying to micro-regulate the "tech sector" for the sake of controlling revenue streams - this statistic alone basically shows why the DMCA is doomed along with all the industries that rely on it. I say a clash of the titans is comming of the likes of which we haven't seen in a long time.
An interesting comparison (Score:1)